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Jul 27, 2016
07/16
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you call yourself an irish american and you don't know who thomas francis mar is. mideast -- most people don't know. one of the most famous irish up until kennedy came along. they were slaves and there was a free australia because of him. he packed, he knew abraham lincoln and daniel oconnel. man who freed catholics in ireland. that's my job is to resurrect the great irishman who was flawed as well as brilliant. >> that is to be irish in ireland was to live in a land not your own and i wonder if you could comment on that as a way of giving background. >> right, he was born in 1823, previctorian ireland and they're getting into the probably 700th year under boot hill and you have to understand, i saw these parallels later what we now call ethic cleansing and what we now call apartheid and genocide, none of those terms were around, all of those were applied to the irish and for almost 700 years it was a crime to be irish. they outlawed their language, they outlawed their sports, so the first thing the irish did when they moved to the first empire of new england empir
you call yourself an irish american and you don't know who thomas francis mar is. mideast -- most people don't know. one of the most famous irish up until kennedy came along. they were slaves and there was a free australia because of him. he packed, he knew abraham lincoln and daniel oconnel. man who freed catholics in ireland. that's my job is to resurrect the great irishman who was flawed as well as brilliant. >> that is to be irish in ireland was to live in a land not your own and i...
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Dec 30, 2018
12/18
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one of he men was certainly his father, thomas marshall, tom mar mar shoal home-schoolinged him and dedicated him to being a lawyer, but the other man he admired was the father of the country, george washington. marshall volunteered when he was 19 years old. to join the virginia militia in 1775. then the following year he joined the kent anyone tall army. in the revolution up until 1781, almost the entire length of it. he fought in seven battles, in three of. the commanded by washington, bran diwynn, german town, and mon mouth, he also spent the visit at valley forge where washington again was in command. so, marshall saw his commander in chief in defeat, saw him in victory, and he saw him at this terrible winter when the army was unclothed, unfed, and unpaid. and marshall's conclusion from these experiences was that washington was the rock on which the revolution rested. he was the man who saw the project through, who brought it to success. when washington returned his commission to congress at the end of the war in 1783, marshall wrote a letter a few days later to an old friend of his, and
one of he men was certainly his father, thomas marshall, tom mar mar shoal home-schoolinged him and dedicated him to being a lawyer, but the other man he admired was the father of the country, george washington. marshall volunteered when he was 19 years old. to join the virginia militia in 1775. then the following year he joined the kent anyone tall army. in the revolution up until 1781, almost the entire length of it. he fought in seven battles, in three of. the commanded by washington, bran...
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Sep 6, 2014
09/14
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it was a weather satellite that went to mars. it actually created kind of a big divide because there were scientists accept luck it was just a stupid era that could have been in any of the other million things that had to happen. in the sciences there's also the police. they would be called the jelly doughnut for energy and that is something people could understand is how much is in the jelly doughnut. so even within science there's a little bit of a divide as to how zealous they should get. tom wolfe was totally wrong. everybody wanted to use the metric system. the only reason that they were not using the metric system is most stuff into aero dot x. is being the one area that the u.s. was still dominating to the point that they didn't have to go metric. they were just scathingly angry about it and there was another attempt to start putting up more highway signs and i think it was 92 and there were so many reactions people just hated it so much. the amazing thing is that while the numbers for people wanting the metric system is j
it was a weather satellite that went to mars. it actually created kind of a big divide because there were scientists accept luck it was just a stupid era that could have been in any of the other million things that had to happen. in the sciences there's also the police. they would be called the jelly doughnut for energy and that is something people could understand is how much is in the jelly doughnut. so even within science there's a little bit of a divide as to how zealous they should get....
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Feb 27, 2011
02/11
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like he was from mars. and so what came after -- what would have come after him and the fact that he didn't have very long to go on his term and some other things. he actually made some deals with people about this. they voted only -- he escaped conviction by 1 vote. he is nevertheless sort of a ruined president after that. he keeps vetoing bills. he's overridden. he has hopes of making a comeback but his real plan was to unite conservatives in the north and the south to create another political party to try to bring -- to take the country back. that was his sort of idea. that it had gotten away from him and he needed groups of the most conservative people, wherever they lived, regardless of party, to sort of band together and take back the country. it didn't work. he leaves office. he doesn't -- he can't get -- the democrats don't really -- the democrats at this time they're not democrats as you know like now. the parties have sort of flipped from where they were. they didn't trust him. and the republicans
like he was from mars. and so what came after -- what would have come after him and the fact that he didn't have very long to go on his term and some other things. he actually made some deals with people about this. they voted only -- he escaped conviction by 1 vote. he is nevertheless sort of a ruined president after that. he keeps vetoing bills. he's overridden. he has hopes of making a comeback but his real plan was to unite conservatives in the north and the south to create another...
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50
Oct 12, 2014
10/14
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satellite that went to mars. it was -- you know, the mist take was the ground crew was using metric or reversed. it created somewhat of a big divide because there were scientist who said it was a stupid error. of the million other things that had to happen. in science, there is also what they call the si police and that is the system international and that is the organization that controlled the metric system and they want everything in science journals to only be which exact si measures. how much energy is in a jelly donut is something they looked out. so there is a divide in science about how zelious they should get but i don't think anyone actually thought nasa should be using the metric system. tom wolf is wrong. everyone in nasa wanted to be using the metric system but the only reason they were not is most stuff in aeronautics was being supplied by the aero space industry and that was the industry the united states was still dominating them. finally nasa, after mars rover said you have to be sourcing in metr
satellite that went to mars. it was -- you know, the mist take was the ground crew was using metric or reversed. it created somewhat of a big divide because there were scientist who said it was a stupid error. of the million other things that had to happen. in science, there is also what they call the si police and that is the system international and that is the organization that controlled the metric system and they want everything in science journals to only be which exact si measures. how...
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May 24, 2014
05/14
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>>host: how long would it take spacecraft with today's technology to get to mars and come back? twenty years? >>guest: no. you could do the whole mission in it is three years if you land on the planet and you use the planetary a mechanics' properly you could do it efficiently, explore the planet, you could be to people there this is a round trip mission. there is some interest in a mission to do the most you could put to instruments on demos but the problem with mars right now is once you lay and you have to take off again for you need the infrastructure on the planet. it has almost 40 percent of earth's gravity. have to have life-support established before you get there than infrastructure to get off the planet if you want to leave. jim lovell and others have proposed into a one-way missions sent to the older infrastructure and we will stay in it you can send younger people better. he only says that in half in jest but there has been some interest in though one-way mission that means once you get there you don't have to worry about to have of way to get back, again. >>host: tee
>>host: how long would it take spacecraft with today's technology to get to mars and come back? twenty years? >>guest: no. you could do the whole mission in it is three years if you land on the planet and you use the planetary a mechanics' properly you could do it efficiently, explore the planet, you could be to people there this is a round trip mission. there is some interest in a mission to do the most you could put to instruments on demos but the problem with mars right now is...
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Sep 1, 2014
09/14
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mars. the mistake was the software was using customary movements and it was somehow reversed but it created a divide because it was just a stupid error that could have been in any other brilliant things that had to have been. and the system of international the organization that basically controls the metric system and they all they want it to be the exact approved measures were others including teachers mike s.i. but they think the jelly doughnut or light years should be an acceptable because that is something that people can understand how much energy is in a jelly doughnut? even with science there is a little divide but i do think anybody legitimately thought that nasa should be using the metric system in fact, tom wolfe was totally wrong everybody wanted to use the metric system the only reason they were not it is most aeronautics were made by the aerospace industry and that was the one industry the u.s. was still dominating to the point they didn't have to buy all the other industries
mars. the mistake was the software was using customary movements and it was somehow reversed but it created a divide because it was just a stupid error that could have been in any other brilliant things that had to have been. and the system of international the organization that basically controls the metric system and they all they want it to be the exact approved measures were others including teachers mike s.i. but they think the jelly doughnut or light years should be an acceptable because...
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Jan 16, 2016
01/16
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is as strong a nationalist as john marshall was before him and jackson appoints tony to be the anti-mar anti-marshall. wilson appointed mcreynolds to get him out of the cabinet essential essentially. a big mistake. >> like any great constitutional scholar i wish this could go on and on but we have time for one last question. this last question asks is the view realistic of dialogue becoming nastier over time or is the court a good model for public discourse. we begin with jefferson and eisenhower being snappy with each other. >> yes, it is. one of the things that a number of justice have said is i may need votes in this case and i cannot afraid to alienate other people. they go to the opera together. they sing in the opera together. i always considered him a friend and i think he thought the same way. i got calls wanting to know if this happened before and yes, it did. but it never showed up in the reports. when mcreynolds issued a scalia type diatribe over the gold cases the reporter of the case refused to put it into the court. and only because other people were there do we know what
is as strong a nationalist as john marshall was before him and jackson appoints tony to be the anti-mar anti-marshall. wilson appointed mcreynolds to get him out of the cabinet essential essentially. a big mistake. >> like any great constitutional scholar i wish this could go on and on but we have time for one last question. this last question asks is the view realistic of dialogue becoming nastier over time or is the court a good model for public discourse. we begin with jefferson and...
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Aug 18, 2019
08/19
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and mississippi state university one of the book festivals board members from mississippi state john mars luck is on the panel. as francis coleman here? dean of libraries? another strong supporter. as is stuart rockwell, director of mississippi humanities council.i don't believe he's in the room but think them for their support and we are in the room today courtesy of forming walkmans walker. our panelists are jaclyn dowd hall commercial be harold, john mars luck and bend when you can purchase copies of their books outdoors and you can find the times they will be signing in your brochure. we will hear from our panelists for about 40 minutes then will open the floor for questions. please go to the podium and answer questions on the microphone at that time. help me welcome jim woodward, deputy state historic preservation officer for mississippi and the author of the civil war siege of jackson mississippi. [applause] >> thank you. welcome everyone. well today. i like to introduce our authors beginning to my immediate left doctor jekyll and del whole foods in oklahoma native she has an underg
and mississippi state university one of the book festivals board members from mississippi state john mars luck is on the panel. as francis coleman here? dean of libraries? another strong supporter. as is stuart rockwell, director of mississippi humanities council.i don't believe he's in the room but think them for their support and we are in the room today courtesy of forming walkmans walker. our panelists are jaclyn dowd hall commercial be harold, john mars luck and bend when you can purchase...
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201
Oct 28, 2013
10/13
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we are going to dig through the swiss of mars and look for life. that would give me the best biologist. look at the nasa portfolio today. it's got biology, chemistry, physics, geology, aerospace engineers, mechanical engineers, electrical engineers, all the s.t.e.m. fields, science, technology, engineering and math, represented in the nasa portfolio. a healthy nasa pumps that but a healthy nasa is a flywheel that society casts for innovation. >> over the past 15 years booktv has aired over 40,000 programs about nonfiction books and authors. booktv every weekend on c-span2. >> taking a look at what's ahead this morning. aske..
we are going to dig through the swiss of mars and look for life. that would give me the best biologist. look at the nasa portfolio today. it's got biology, chemistry, physics, geology, aerospace engineers, mechanical engineers, electrical engineers, all the s.t.e.m. fields, science, technology, engineering and math, represented in the nasa portfolio. a healthy nasa pumps that but a healthy nasa is a flywheel that society casts for innovation. >> over the past 15 years booktv has aired...
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Aug 31, 2016
08/16
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of freedom remains a champion for veterans he devotes a energy to the goal of reaching and exploring mars to draw awareness to the cause he wears the shirt that reads get your ass to mars laugh laugh if anybody believes it is possible it is the soldier in tonight he will begin conversation of the mission control director of the soldier in enterprises please give them a warm welcome. [applause] get a load of los. >> banks for coming tonight this this this second house of worship of this year. >> was kind of grateful you didn't have your son. [applause] he has the original the guy behind as the limited edition. i have been working with the estate and adheres i will say a few years ago people would say how long have you worked together piece says not long enough i notice he doesn't say that anymore laugh laugh i call myself his mother sometimes my title says manager and mission control director of buzz aldrin but he calls me mission director panetta's are accurate because i at no control and he will see that shortly laugh laugh but i guess we have to figure out where we want to star she told
of freedom remains a champion for veterans he devotes a energy to the goal of reaching and exploring mars to draw awareness to the cause he wears the shirt that reads get your ass to mars laugh laugh if anybody believes it is possible it is the soldier in tonight he will begin conversation of the mission control director of the soldier in enterprises please give them a warm welcome. [applause] get a load of los. >> banks for coming tonight this this this second house of worship of this...
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155
Sep 5, 2012
09/12
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mars is in reach. let keep going to mars. no! there's no reason to go to mars because russia is not going to mars. so the whole program ends. it just ends. and people looking for things to blame other than the fact that the soviet union did not commit to the moon. it's that simple. really i promise. let's go forward a little further. 199, july to, the step of the space museum in washington, d.c. george herbert walker bush president of the united states uses the ass pushes moment to stand blay greatest museum on effort the new museum of national air and space museum on the 20th anniversary of the apollo landing we will build a stays station and colony on the moon and go on to mars. we wanted to give a kennedy speech. he took the glowing rhetoric apart. he referenced columbus and the discovery in the genes as humans and americans. he went down that path? that delusional path. he went down and so he says let's do this. it'll take 30 years but to do this. they costed out the plan, half a trillion dollars. it was doa in commerce. he a
mars is in reach. let keep going to mars. no! there's no reason to go to mars because russia is not going to mars. so the whole program ends. it just ends. and people looking for things to blame other than the fact that the soviet union did not commit to the moon. it's that simple. really i promise. let's go forward a little further. 199, july to, the step of the space museum in washington, d.c. george herbert walker bush president of the united states uses the ass pushes moment to stand blay...
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Aug 15, 2019
08/19
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he mentioned that we're increasingly more likely to mary mayor -- mar marry someone outse our faith rather than outside our party. this is a change. as our closest relationships become more politically uniform we have a consensus that is screw -- skewed, our channels of information are limited, and we become tribal. and as pete and quinn mentioned having attempt -- temptation to conflate our faith with our political ideals. for particular president. which is high ar than% that would, firm their support. increasingly term evangelical no longer a -- term but a tribal one. we have lent our ascend to. even as our identities are political, our politics is growing apocalyptic. you saw that in last election, studies and survey show more than 2/3 of american electorate they reforwar re-- regard them , sometimes hate. that leads to contempt. making compromise more difficu difficult. not surprisingingly we tend to jetsojet is son just and moderae means. there is almost a movement going to, tightening on liberal democracy, at universities, 40% according to a survey think that free speech is dangerous
he mentioned that we're increasingly more likely to mary mayor -- mar marry someone outse our faith rather than outside our party. this is a change. as our closest relationships become more politically uniform we have a consensus that is screw -- skewed, our channels of information are limited, and we become tribal. and as pete and quinn mentioned having attempt -- temptation to conflate our faith with our political ideals. for particular president. which is high ar than% that would, firm their...
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Jun 6, 2020
06/20
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all hell breaks loose, who is responsible for this and this was a campaign that had been marked by -- marred and marked by contractor fraud and corruption from the get be. those who died were issue prepared, ill equipped, ill trained and were like sheep to the slaughterbut many people in congress said we want to get to the bottom of this, and of course, one of the things to do that is to follow the money, where is this trail going to lead? they knew pretty well where it would lewd, the secretary of the treasure, alexander hamilton which a lot of people hate. long before the musical. people out to get him. so the first congressional investigation committee is established, and they submit a request to washington, to the executive, for documentation, and washington as first president realizes that it's going to set precedent so he huddled with his cabinet, says what do we do? and the cabinet says, you have to hand over the documents. but you can insist on keeping back any documents that you feel would be -- the lest of which you feel would be detrimental to the public interest. now know what th
all hell breaks loose, who is responsible for this and this was a campaign that had been marked by -- marred and marked by contractor fraud and corruption from the get be. those who died were issue prepared, ill equipped, ill trained and were like sheep to the slaughterbut many people in congress said we want to get to the bottom of this, and of course, one of the things to do that is to follow the money, where is this trail going to lead? they knew pretty well where it would lewd, the...
4
4.0
Jan 30, 2021
01/21
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war, why send monroe to france and morecambe federalism quick tsubaki already had that in governor mars. all he did was worsen the relationship between a revolutionary france and the united states. the french could not stand them. outside of their food and wine, morris could not stand the french. he was creating quite a stir in washington had to recall him. his first pick to be minister was madison who turned them down. he reached out to robert livingston and new york and livingston turned him down. so monroe was his third pick it initially he would have had to tipped his hat to what monroe did for him. he immediately won the french over, despite having his bad rang sacked and the foodstuff he brought aboard were banished on the dock as soon as he got there. people are still starving and revolutionary paris. he really does his best to put the past foot forward and try to maintain a relationship, as unstable a country is or was in western europe. by his comments and approach to start to work in hamilton is openly working to get monroe recalled. and finally when the catch one of the lette
war, why send monroe to france and morecambe federalism quick tsubaki already had that in governor mars. all he did was worsen the relationship between a revolutionary france and the united states. the french could not stand them. outside of their food and wine, morris could not stand the french. he was creating quite a stir in washington had to recall him. his first pick to be minister was madison who turned them down. he reached out to robert livingston and new york and livingston turned him...
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214
Nov 28, 2010
11/10
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mar 31st 1776. it's the remember the ladies letter. everybody is nodding. everybody who has taken a women's history course knows about this. it's an unhappy life, but she suspect really a feminist in anything like a modernceps of the term. she is a singular woman, an independent woman who recognizes the implications of liberal argument, but it's an interesting dilemma. what do you do when you're 200 years ahead of your time which is what she really was, and the decision she was most unhappy when john was away. she was clinically depressed between 1781-85 while she was away. i don't think that's bad. i think that's the way it was. to call her a feminist, i would call here a protofeminist. you get the point. second dipping moment, john's presidency, again, what i find so stunning is the overlapping relation between the private and the public story. john's elected president? 1796. it's a close election, 72-69, very sectional vote. adams comes to the presidency almost, maybe worse than obama in terms of what he inherits. i mean, obama has a good case that he's
mar 31st 1776. it's the remember the ladies letter. everybody is nodding. everybody who has taken a women's history course knows about this. it's an unhappy life, but she suspect really a feminist in anything like a modernceps of the term. she is a singular woman, an independent woman who recognizes the implications of liberal argument, but it's an interesting dilemma. what do you do when you're 200 years ahead of your time which is what she really was, and the decision she was most unhappy...
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60
Apr 20, 2013
04/13
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it looks at the surface of mars. you don't have much out there. in the desert floor at that time of the year, the hard mass. they did in the day again for shelter. there were a up. they could not get it into the ground. very hard today. not like you would see unless you have heavy equipment to dig down further. our panel was bad. on many aspects of this that we seem to be unprepared for when they went into the first night. the court, when he went down, actually three prepped with a rescue helicopter. so if they had just called one of them, notified properly, 45 minutes and 45 minutes out the cut got them off the ground and where he needed to be. he was communicating, would not have been a problem. but unfortunately they did not like how he got shot down. how he gets shut down as the starter all this, the friendly fire shoot and the mistakes that are made. and the way -- the mistakes and the flying of it, to me, it comes down to the fact that, well, is training officer did not shoot him down to clarify that point. these of the one it. because he br
it looks at the surface of mars. you don't have much out there. in the desert floor at that time of the year, the hard mass. they did in the day again for shelter. there were a up. they could not get it into the ground. very hard today. not like you would see unless you have heavy equipment to dig down further. our panel was bad. on many aspects of this that we seem to be unprepared for when they went into the first night. the court, when he went down, actually three prepped with a rescue...
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54
Feb 25, 2018
02/18
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and those mobsters who marred our lives to do good to permit lung -- public service i would pace around my office and finally i sat down to write out a script the governor and this is the script. governor, i have some very implicit news and then to be spending three months in tax evasion in federal court so with his decision expresses the belief to have some association with organized crime. so we don't want you to learn of this secondhand. so i read over my speech but there is no escaping or rationalization i could not pretend everything would be as it was. the phone on my desk rang. placing the script in front of me, hello governor. what is going on? i read my script word for word the governor was silent i finished and closed my eyes waiting for his response. >> i don't see how that should affect you. i certainly feel for you but i don't see how it affects you. you are a superb public official and i don't think it should have any effect on you. stunned i think tim looked at the photo with a large color photograph of the world trade center a self-contained world right escaped each day
and those mobsters who marred our lives to do good to permit lung -- public service i would pace around my office and finally i sat down to write out a script the governor and this is the script. governor, i have some very implicit news and then to be spending three months in tax evasion in federal court so with his decision expresses the belief to have some association with organized crime. so we don't want you to learn of this secondhand. so i read over my speech but there is no escaping or...
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May 7, 2016
05/16
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if you came down from mars and you read that in the constitution, you would say that sounds pretty important and then somebody could come along and tell you why it is that these two provisions are not enforced by the supreme court or by anyone else and they are completely lost in our republican constitution for and why did they have to get rid of them and other provisions of the constitution? because our constitution is really of the second variety. it's a republican constitution and you need to adopt a living approach to get rid of the parts that get in the way. so i think what i'm hoping to propose is a compromise between the idea, between denying that partisanship plays any role because it clearly does and identifying what that difference is about, not making political preferences as to outcomes but competing views as to the constitution. i will say one more thing as to how he opened his remarks. both of these visions of we the people are attractive and appealing. they really are. that is why, we sometimes try to hold both of them in our mind at the same time, popular rule is appealing an
if you came down from mars and you read that in the constitution, you would say that sounds pretty important and then somebody could come along and tell you why it is that these two provisions are not enforced by the supreme court or by anyone else and they are completely lost in our republican constitution for and why did they have to get rid of them and other provisions of the constitution? because our constitution is really of the second variety. it's a republican constitution and you need...
13
13
Jan 1, 2022
01/22
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by mar of 177 -- march of 1776, a report was making the rounds in britain that back in america "common sense" is realize to all ranks -- read to all ranks, and as many who read it, so many become converted where perhaps an hour before they were violent against the idea of independence. so what they're saying is the reports from america that people who want nothing to do with the cause of independence are reading this pamphlet and suddenly and immediately and decisively turning in favor of independence, that its effect is that powerful. like a drug. paine's friend, benjamin rush, later recalled that the pamphlet's effect was sudden and extensive upon the american mind. it was read by public men, repeated in clubs, spowpted in schools -- spouted in schools, and in one instance delivered from the pulpit instead of a sermon by a clergyman in connecticut. noticeably, phrases lifted from "common sense" taliban to turn up in -- began to turn up in all sorts of petitions written by ordinary americans with now calls for independence. and throughout the colonies, letters to newspapers would quot
by mar of 177 -- march of 1776, a report was making the rounds in britain that back in america "common sense" is realize to all ranks -- read to all ranks, and as many who read it, so many become converted where perhaps an hour before they were violent against the idea of independence. so what they're saying is the reports from america that people who want nothing to do with the cause of independence are reading this pamphlet and suddenly and immediately and decisively turning in...
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48
Feb 16, 2021
02/21
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. >> he had a commendable affair and all governor mars did was worse in the relationship between revolutionary france and the united states, the french could not stand them and outside of their food and wine morris could not stand the french and he was creating quite a stir and washington had to recall him his first pick to the minister was madison who turned him down he reached out to robert livingston in new york and he turned him down so monroe was his third pick and initially he would've had to pick this up for what monroe did for him, he immediately won the french over despite having his bags read him sacked and what he brought aboard were vanished on the dock as soon as he got there, people were still starving and revolutionary paris but he really does his best to put the best foot forward and try to maintain a relationship with an unstable country as it was in western europe. but his comments in his approach and hamilton is openly working to get monroe recalled and finally when they catch one of the letters that he has written that comes into pickering's hands, there is the thing to end
. >> he had a commendable affair and all governor mars did was worse in the relationship between revolutionary france and the united states, the french could not stand them and outside of their food and wine morris could not stand the french and he was creating quite a stir and washington had to recall him his first pick to the minister was madison who turned him down he reached out to robert livingston in new york and he turned him down so monroe was his third pick and initially he...
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183
Aug 23, 2009
08/09
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and ben franklin looked at him like he was from mars and said we're a country of farmers and merchants and we don't have an army much less for military arming but we have somebody who knows a lot about geometry and he asz the test and he said you're in charge of building forts. so he builtv'w forts across6Ñ river, thÏh"elaware river from philadelphia at forts mercer and billingsport and while he was building these forts he realized the british ships would go into delaware and bombard philadelphia. so he started building what's known a boat. these are basically wood gentry trunks that were shaved down and they would put iron tips on the end and they would put under water so when the british chips would sail in they would puncture the bottom of the ship and then they would sink. the americans said this guy knows what he's doing. so they made him a colonel of the engineersñ and they paid hi a reward. and ben franklin went off8÷ to paris and suddenly there was a battle for who would kosciuszko work for next. well, he got the attention of general horacio gates who was Ñ( commander for
and ben franklin looked at him like he was from mars and said we're a country of farmers and merchants and we don't have an army much less for military arming but we have somebody who knows a lot about geometry and he asz the test and he said you're in charge of building forts. so he builtv'w forts across6Ñ river, thÏh"elaware river from philadelphia at forts mercer and billingsport and while he was building these forts he realized the british ships would go into delaware and bombard...
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Jun 14, 2009
06/09
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and penn franklin looked at him like he was from mars and said we are a country of farmers and merchants and we don't have army much lest a test for what is it, military engineering? but we do have somebody that knows a lot about geometry. come back and we will give a geometry test. kosciuszko came back and took the test and a stick and then franklin said you are in charge of building forts. [laughter] so he built forts across the river, the delaware river from philadelphia at fort emmerson and billing support, and while he was building the sports, they realized the british ships would sail into the delaware and try to bombard philadelphia. so he started building what is known as a cheveaux and they would put tips on the end and put them under water so that when the british ships would sail in they would puncture the bottom of the ship and then they would sink. the americans said this guy knows what he's doing so they made him a car all of engineers and paid him a reward and ben franklin went to paris and suddenly there was a battle for who would kosciuszko work for next. well, he got th
and penn franklin looked at him like he was from mars and said we are a country of farmers and merchants and we don't have army much lest a test for what is it, military engineering? but we do have somebody that knows a lot about geometry. come back and we will give a geometry test. kosciuszko came back and took the test and a stick and then franklin said you are in charge of building forts. [laughter] so he built forts across the river, the delaware river from philadelphia at fort emmerson and...
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Aug 29, 2021
08/21
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and the term we the people was written by governor mars. nobody knows who governor morris is he was representative from pennsylvania, even though he lived in new york. he was a peg leg guy was famous for his wit and his unfortunate interest in other people's lives, but there was a committee on the to drafting the constitution and every state was represented represented camera, rhode island wasn't there because it both boycotted so his 12 states, but they appointed madison hamilton agreed to a point governor mars to rewrite the document. here's how the document read before he rewrote it. we the people of the states of new hampshire. massachusetts connecticut, rhode island and then down the atlantic coast, we the people of those states. he changed it. it's the single most important editorial change in american history. it just says we the people of the united states. that's the whole issue at debate throughout the convention between the nationalists and the confederationists whether we should think of ourselves as citizens of the united state
and the term we the people was written by governor mars. nobody knows who governor morris is he was representative from pennsylvania, even though he lived in new york. he was a peg leg guy was famous for his wit and his unfortunate interest in other people's lives, but there was a committee on the to drafting the constitution and every state was represented represented camera, rhode island wasn't there because it both boycotted so his 12 states, but they appointed madison hamilton agreed to a...
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Mar 20, 2016
03/16
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apparently -- you're more the expert on criminal law butting this administration seems strangely pro mars mothers legalization, and so since they favor that, they're using operation chokepoint to get at agencies they don't like, like gun sales, or payday lenders, and not after industries that actually are illegal but which they have somehow received favor which is marijuana use. >> host: to show prejudice, end with this observation. first of all, whenever they write to congress they say payday lender and pornography dealers. here's the deal, we're changing the structure within the financial system that allows fraudulent businesses, and he says, we're choking them off from the very air they need to survive. i mean, what is government doing in that kind of business? >> guest: i agree. again, goes other agencies as well, is that the government could, if it thought they were illegal, prosecute them directly. but instead it's using the expense, the burdens, the demands of the regulatory state, which regulates almost all businesses now in the country of any size. it's using the threat of that.
apparently -- you're more the expert on criminal law butting this administration seems strangely pro mars mothers legalization, and so since they favor that, they're using operation chokepoint to get at agencies they don't like, like gun sales, or payday lenders, and not after industries that actually are illegal but which they have somehow received favor which is marijuana use. >> host: to show prejudice, end with this observation. first of all, whenever they write to congress they say...
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Aug 28, 2021
08/21
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was boycotted so 12 states that they have pointeded medicine and hamilton to redo point gouverneur mars to rewrite the document and here's h the document read before he rewrote it. we the people of the state of new hampshire, massachusetts, connecticut, rhode island, and then down the atlantic coast,e the people of those states. he changed it. it is the single most important editorial change in american history. just as we the people of the united states and that is a whole issue a debate throughout the convention between the nationalist and the confederations. what we should think of ourselves as citizens of the united states or particular states. raymond counties within the states. so right now, one of the legacies of the founder is an ongoing argument about whether government is us or government is them. that is an ongoing argument in the central argument he bequeathed us and it i is still with us. ronald reagan used to say, and reagan was crucial in altering the american narrative from the new deal to republican conservative point of view. namely that if someone from the federal gov
was boycotted so 12 states that they have pointeded medicine and hamilton to redo point gouverneur mars to rewrite the document and here's h the document read before he rewrote it. we the people of the state of new hampshire, massachusetts, connecticut, rhode island, and then down the atlantic coast,e the people of those states. he changed it. it is the single most important editorial change in american history. just as we the people of the united states and that is a whole issue a debate...
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Sep 28, 2013
09/13
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>> i want to point out in a job like working on the mars rover is, both of the current rovers, opportunity and curiosity, the project is 50% women. we have come a long way. it is largely cultural. i think for whatever reason, we haven't given girls or boys or really good female technical role model. more and more, kids are growing up developing their ideas of who they can be from the media and an example i like to give is while it is a wonderful show and very entertaining nobody watches the big bang theory and what to grow up to the sheldon. we need to to teach people we are not sheldon and there's a lot more to offer. i don't ever want to hear again and i hear all the time that girls can't do math and boys won't like me if i am smart. we don't just encourage the girls but the police. i do think lack of good cultural image of who technical people really are. >> i would like to answer that. my mother was the only female in junior out of 900 engineers at rocketdyne, one out of 900. i asked her once, mate and offhand comment, you probably have a lot of dates when you were working there, didn'
>> i want to point out in a job like working on the mars rover is, both of the current rovers, opportunity and curiosity, the project is 50% women. we have come a long way. it is largely cultural. i think for whatever reason, we haven't given girls or boys or really good female technical role model. more and more, kids are growing up developing their ideas of who they can be from the media and an example i like to give is while it is a wonderful show and very entertaining nobody watches...
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Jan 29, 2017
01/17
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and mar very is not any great principle of liberty. dred scott is about the truth have slaves but, yes, that actually could count as a bill of rights idea, but here -- landmark cases you toss it out and strictly speaking not bill of rights cases. gideon very wainwright. griswold vs. connecticut. "new york times" versus sullivan, brown versus board of ookayed, roe v. wade, lawrence v. texas. miranda v. arizona. none of those is a bill of rights case. tinker very des moines. why not? because the bill of rights originally applied only against the federal government. congress shall make no law of a certain export the tenth amendment is about states' rights and in between celebration of local juries and local militia. the arm bill of rights was anti-federalist, tea party, localist, suspicion of the federal government and that important but that not our bill of rights today because you believe we have madison that and you most fundmental rights need to be protected against states and localities. balloon vs. board of education, didon and wain
and mar very is not any great principle of liberty. dred scott is about the truth have slaves but, yes, that actually could count as a bill of rights idea, but here -- landmark cases you toss it out and strictly speaking not bill of rights cases. gideon very wainwright. griswold vs. connecticut. "new york times" versus sullivan, brown versus board of ookayed, roe v. wade, lawrence v. texas. miranda v. arizona. none of those is a bill of rights case. tinker very des moines. why not?...
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Apr 3, 2022
04/22
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right now where we have you know, helicopter on mars. i mean, he's his lifespan is extraordinary story. other presidents how much time have you been around george w bush less than others a very i don't consider myself to know him intimately. well, i am i know carl rove super well he lives in austin near me and i i see him a lot george p bush the land commissioner of texas is a neighbor on my street on the son of jeb bush and george w bush. i would like to write about the if i were george w. i think he is. stories that need to be told that haven't been properly if he's interested in making his legacy look better. and that is the bullhorn moment the weak one week after 9/11 the story of how he was in florida and was told about 9/11 in the air force one, you know, i had to fly to different military bases and then how he came to washington and we were under siege where how he pulled the country together and then stood on the rubble of the trade center with that bullhorn moment and then through a striking yankee stadium and i would do one wee
right now where we have you know, helicopter on mars. i mean, he's his lifespan is extraordinary story. other presidents how much time have you been around george w bush less than others a very i don't consider myself to know him intimately. well, i am i know carl rove super well he lives in austin near me and i i see him a lot george p bush the land commissioner of texas is a neighbor on my street on the son of jeb bush and george w bush. i would like to write about the if i were george w. i...
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Aug 17, 2019
08/19
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doctor mars luck is co-author of "hold on with the bulldog group" the short study of ulysses s grant which will be discussed today. and finally, author and historian doctor ben nguyen as a native of florence mississippi after attending bill stops college as an undergraduate he earned an ma in history from mississippi college and a doctorate from the university of mississippi he currently serves as professor of history at the university of georgia, north georgia and gainesville. he is the author of four books including "in tune" Ãb in the subject of today's discussion the man who punched jefferson davis the political life of henry stewart foot published by lsu press in 2018. i'm going to start with ben, if he doesn't mind too much. and as each of you to give a brief overview of your book and what we are talking about today. the book title the man who punched jefferson davis really titled man who punched fill in the blank. this guy punched a lot of guys during his career. for start and want to think the mississippi book festival for inviting me here today i want to thank c-span of cou
doctor mars luck is co-author of "hold on with the bulldog group" the short study of ulysses s grant which will be discussed today. and finally, author and historian doctor ben nguyen as a native of florence mississippi after attending bill stops college as an undergraduate he earned an ma in history from mississippi college and a doctorate from the university of mississippi he currently serves as professor of history at the university of georgia, north georgia and gainesville. he is...
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318
Oct 9, 2012
10/12
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they are on mars. programming the rover's drive, an engineer may view the work as a joint accomplishment, a second person view. and then working as an ensemble, acting together through the rover's hardware and software systems, everything turns inside out in this third person perspective. the rover becomes the team, and they can rave about its exploits proudly. i would paraphrase that associated press story about spirit's demise by saying this intrepid team of scientific explorers will be remembered for demystifying mars to the masses. this is a story of perseverance. the mer scientists and engineers have invented a new practice of planetary field science. these are their foot prints on mars. the robotic geologist metaphor in this metaphor, the team tolerates and in some ways they revel in their anonymity. the more fantastic the historic exploits of spirit and opportunity, the more proud you can feel to play even a small part in this mission. this projecting of personal ambition onto the group's effort
they are on mars. programming the rover's drive, an engineer may view the work as a joint accomplishment, a second person view. and then working as an ensemble, acting together through the rover's hardware and software systems, everything turns inside out in this third person perspective. the rover becomes the team, and they can rave about its exploits proudly. i would paraphrase that associated press story about spirit's demise by saying this intrepid team of scientific explorers will be...
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Feb 12, 2014
02/14
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number two, the mars is a foreign militaries the capabilities approaching those of the united states and our allies. number three, increasing tensions in the pacific. first, as they have publicly and repeatedly insisted, al qaeda and other terrorist organizations aspire to acquire weapons of mass destruction to further their agenda. the current instability in syria presents a perfect opportunity for al qaeda and associated groups to acquire weapons for their components. of the syrian stockpiles are currently under the control of the regime, the movement of these weapons from current locations for disposal or other reasons drastically increases the risk of weapons or components falling into the wrong hands. there is also the very real possibility that extremists in the syrian opposition could overrun and exploit chemical and biological weapons storage facilities before these materials on note. outside of syria the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and associated technologies remains an ongoing challenge. state and not state actors engaging in these activities often sidestep
number two, the mars is a foreign militaries the capabilities approaching those of the united states and our allies. number three, increasing tensions in the pacific. first, as they have publicly and repeatedly insisted, al qaeda and other terrorist organizations aspire to acquire weapons of mass destruction to further their agenda. the current instability in syria presents a perfect opportunity for al qaeda and associated groups to acquire weapons for their components. of the syrian stockpiles...
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Apr 21, 2013
04/13
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the iraqi desert looks like the surface of mars. there's not much of the. on the desert for that time of year, the knights and shovels they can to dig in to shoulder, it's like digging -- they can get in the ground. it was very hard to dig. it wasn't salty sand like you would see a lesser heavy equipment to dig down for the. the hardpan was a bad. there are many aspects of this that they were unprepared for when it went into that first night. the quarter we went down was actually pre-prep with rescue helicopters. so if you just called one of them, they notified react properly, 45 minutes in, 45 minutes out, they could have gotten off the ground. he was commuting. so that wouldn't have been a problem. but, unfortunately, they did like how he got shot down. how he got shot down started all this. the friendly fire issue. and the mistakes that were made. and the way, the mistakes and the flying of it to become a comes down to the fact that, while his commanding officer did not shoot them down, to clarify that point, he's not the one who did it, but because he b
the iraqi desert looks like the surface of mars. there's not much of the. on the desert for that time of year, the knights and shovels they can to dig in to shoulder, it's like digging -- they can get in the ground. it was very hard to dig. it wasn't salty sand like you would see a lesser heavy equipment to dig down for the. the hardpan was a bad. there are many aspects of this that they were unprepared for when it went into that first night. the quarter we went down was actually pre-prep with...
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May 27, 2018
05/18
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. >> women who loved him but men called him little mars. >> we have done our duty of looking at the constitutional vision and now the audience once more, what sort of person was see? our first question to tell us more about his temper and why did he admit his affair? we have though letter and it's so cool in the exhibit downstairs. we had paced out the dual you can stand at either side and see how close they were to each other when they stood. it is remarkable. tell us more about his temper and why he admitted the affair. >> he is a man of energy that is bursting forth. he gets selected secretary of the treasury of a friday. he's securing loans and so forth and hitting the ground running on monday. when he is solicited by congress to write opinions or reports why write 4000 words when you can write 24000 words. he is the smartest guy in the room contrary to what can be said is a smartest man but unfortunately he lets everybody know it. because they're such a genius there there's more than a touch of arrogance. there's not a lot of humility. but he dies relatively young. i think i have outlived him
. >> women who loved him but men called him little mars. >> we have done our duty of looking at the constitutional vision and now the audience once more, what sort of person was see? our first question to tell us more about his temper and why did he admit his affair? we have though letter and it's so cool in the exhibit downstairs. we had paced out the dual you can stand at either side and see how close they were to each other when they stood. it is remarkable. tell us more about...
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Oct 21, 2012
10/12
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>> i wrote about robert mack that mar, a name in this city, architect of vietnam, that book published in 1996 called "the living and the dead," and i wrote a book called "sons of mississippi," the book previous to this, a study of the civil rights south and integration of james meredith at the university of ol miss. i like to pick out subjects that i feel have a lot of resonance to the culture history biography. >> and paul's most recent book national book critic circle award finalist. thank you for joining us
>> i wrote about robert mack that mar, a name in this city, architect of vietnam, that book published in 1996 called "the living and the dead," and i wrote a book called "sons of mississippi," the book previous to this, a study of the civil rights south and integration of james meredith at the university of ol miss. i like to pick out subjects that i feel have a lot of resonance to the culture history biography. >> and paul's most recent book national book critic...
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Aug 6, 2017
08/17
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, female, all recognized is that the concept of liberty is not something that is won by conquer and mar. you do not free through constitution. you cannot plow other field overnight. in order to incorporate liberty into a society it must be a societal change and that's what was happening in america. this societal change that actually said, we the people. we, the people, will make change. it this constitutional republic that makes america great because only in a constitutional republic can a minority group have a society changing voice. and this is just scratching the surface. fear in those short period of time i've not gone a really good justice to this but i would encourage you, encourage everybody, to learn the truth about the end of slavery in america, to learn the truth about how liberty is spread and what our founders did to make sure that we were a place built on the principle that all men are created equal. all men are created equal and today by the crater with certain inalienable rights. >> host: tim from massachusetts go ahead, tim. >> good afternoon, guys, folks. sorry. c-span,
, female, all recognized is that the concept of liberty is not something that is won by conquer and mar. you do not free through constitution. you cannot plow other field overnight. in order to incorporate liberty into a society it must be a societal change and that's what was happening in america. this societal change that actually said, we the people. we, the people, will make change. it this constitutional republic that makes america great because only in a constitutional republic can a...
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Jun 13, 2009
06/09
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and ben franklin looked at him like he was from mars and said we're a country of farmers and merchant and don't have an army, much less a test for what is it? military engineering and we do have somebody who knows a lot about gee yorment and come back and we'll give you a geometry test and he came back and took the test and he aced it and ben franklin sid are in charge of building forts and he built forts across the delaware river from philadelphia, at forts mercer and billingsport and while he was building these forts, they realized that the british ships would sail into the delaware, and try to bombard philadelphia. so he started building what is known as a chevaux de frise, they were tree trunks, saved down and put iron tips on the end and put them under water and when the ships would sail in, they would puncture the bottom of the ship. and then they would sink. the americans said, this guy knows what he is doing and made hum a colonel of the engineers and paid him a reward, and ben franklin went off to paris and suddenly there was a battle, for who would kosciuszko work for next.
and ben franklin looked at him like he was from mars and said we're a country of farmers and merchant and don't have an army, much less a test for what is it? military engineering and we do have somebody who knows a lot about gee yorment and come back and we'll give you a geometry test and he came back and took the test and he aced it and ben franklin sid are in charge of building forts and he built forts across the delaware river from philadelphia, at forts mercer and billingsport and while he...
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5.0
Feb 22, 2022
02/22
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an attack against our democracy and it's like all these people are getting arrested and here he is mar-a-lago, i'll take around for 2024. >> forty-first out of 44 you think you should be lower? >> hell yeah. >> that dog in north carolina, your response? >> what we need to remember is surveys are completed by human beings. historians and people who are following presidential leadership, we still have to remember this is very subjective and people tend to respond based on their own beliefs in their views, that is why it is so important to have a diverse poll of participants. he may have been lower if we had a different group of people, he may even higher if we had someone else. we are pleased this year's poll is so diverse. i think we are close to where a lot of folks are at this point in terms of ranking, it can change by the next study or survey, trump could advance or decline. a lot depends on what happens in the next few months or years. it is so w much going on at the moment and we really do have to wait for a while and see what his legacy is going to be and how he does hold up. >> on the
an attack against our democracy and it's like all these people are getting arrested and here he is mar-a-lago, i'll take around for 2024. >> forty-first out of 44 you think you should be lower? >> hell yeah. >> that dog in north carolina, your response? >> what we need to remember is surveys are completed by human beings. historians and people who are following presidential leadership, we still have to remember this is very subjective and people tend to respond based on...
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Jul 11, 2020
07/20
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destroy their villages and how -- when that happened all hell breaks loose and this is a campaign that is marred and marked by contract from the get-go. a lot of those guys who died were ill-prepared, ill-equipped like sheep to the slaughter. many people in congress said okay we want to get to the bottom of this and one of the things to do that is to follow the money, where's the trail going to lead, they know where it is going to lead, the secretary of the treasury is alexander hamilton who most people hate, this long before the musical, people were out to get him and so the first congressional investigation committee is established and they submit the request to washington, to the executive for documentation and washington as first president realizes the president, this is where he handles his cabinet. what do we do and they say he's got to hand over the documents but going back, any documents you feel, the least of which you feel would be detrimental to the public interest, we now know what that is called in our lifetime, executive privilege, that is where it comes from. getting back to my op
destroy their villages and how -- when that happened all hell breaks loose and this is a campaign that is marred and marked by contract from the get-go. a lot of those guys who died were ill-prepared, ill-equipped like sheep to the slaughter. many people in congress said okay we want to get to the bottom of this and one of the things to do that is to follow the money, where's the trail going to lead, they know where it is going to lead, the secretary of the treasury is alexander hamilton who...
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Oct 8, 2012
10/12
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these are the big questions that make many of us very excited about mars. as i have said, it's not practical to do the ackley control of a spacecraft on mars because of the speed of the radio waves, which is the same as the speed of light. and it causes a time delay in seeing and affecting what is happening. but by acting in directly through computer programs that monitor and control the rovers and instruments throughout the work day, people have been working on mars for over eight years. two teams of scientists and engineers operating between rovers' called spirit and opportunity have driven together over 25 miles of sand dunes in and out of a dozen creatures and climb hills hundreds of feet high to televise the leaders of the deposits and they've also stopped to read my ear that you and take photographs. the scientists have scraped the surfaces and microphotograph the texture and analyze the molecular composition. in february of 2004, a month after the landing, i had the privilege to observe the mission operations at the jet propulsion lab in pasadena for
these are the big questions that make many of us very excited about mars. as i have said, it's not practical to do the ackley control of a spacecraft on mars because of the speed of the radio waves, which is the same as the speed of light. and it causes a time delay in seeing and affecting what is happening. but by acting in directly through computer programs that monitor and control the rovers and instruments throughout the work day, people have been working on mars for over eight years. two...
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Apr 21, 2013
04/13
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william rehnquist is chief justice wrote, i think it was like 1988, i think, '85 or '88, bid mar v. vinson, in a dissent, says this is historically not credible. this is not what they meant when they passed the first amendment, and he went through right down the line what they meant, and the first amendment was simply that the congress shall not establish a nationa church. that's all they meant. they did not mean we had a secularizing state. and, unfortunately, that has become the law. that is, that's the way we think of things now. people think of jefferson's words before they even know what is in the first amendment, and i'm arguing for the radical -- well, i'm arguing for the radical position. but that's william rehnquist's position. he's, of course, deceased. that everson was bad law. it should be thrown out. all those establishment cases should be just chucked. they're confused -- they're too confused to be able to rectify, and a sign of that is the court itself can't figure out how to balance the establishment clause and freedom of religion clause, free exercise clause. they g
william rehnquist is chief justice wrote, i think it was like 1988, i think, '85 or '88, bid mar v. vinson, in a dissent, says this is historically not credible. this is not what they meant when they passed the first amendment, and he went through right down the line what they meant, and the first amendment was simply that the congress shall not establish a nationa church. that's all they meant. they did not mean we had a secularizing state. and, unfortunately, that has become the law. that is,...
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Mar 18, 2012
03/12
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we have a beautiful opportunity right now it's a race marred man running, all of whom can be discussing these things at length everywhere they go and not be dead by well, gee, did he pay taxes in 1974 and and a bit disappointed that? who gives a, i don't care. the fact of the matter is that we have got to persuade the american people to our point of view. or it's over. in the end, the american people will decide what kind of country they want to have. benjamin franklin said it. from the last day of the constitutional convention, he was so ill he wrote it and gave it to james wilson, the fellow delegate from pennsylvania to read and at the end of the speech, what franklin sands and i paraphrase again, the constitution will work for a period of time, but then the people will decide if they want to live under despotism or not. and if they want to live under despotism, then they deserve it. you have to keep in mind, these men who are berated and smeared by the left of the time come the framers of the constitution, after the revolutionary war was over, they could time it is done in so many c
we have a beautiful opportunity right now it's a race marred man running, all of whom can be discussing these things at length everywhere they go and not be dead by well, gee, did he pay taxes in 1974 and and a bit disappointed that? who gives a, i don't care. the fact of the matter is that we have got to persuade the american people to our point of view. or it's over. in the end, the american people will decide what kind of country they want to have. benjamin franklin said it. from the last...
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Jul 5, 2012
07/12
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er, ouhlo tets adt 00es the mar begins when one of ou clients jerry connelly in virginia 920 tes iha ntc idwh rug rnlrn d,eahee progressive that the people in the room would love to have elect, you know, stands shoulder to shoulder with you all on al ofhe isstheman y cfo, tg . heos 0vs. bblooin the next round. 350 votes. so i would say, please, it can be tiringntuingto g anyt o old ci wthnim atakin the atmosphere that we're in. but i would ask you all to please persevere as you have and continue to fight that fit. beeh'smuig ond ths ucask ou i tyoo somebody two years from now is going to have one of these charts and there are oing to be elections th are just as close if n cos ertectsanhef yo bl hlyo , molo begprag- reera get to the polls. thank you. [applause] thanyorisykw. weha cte er t cuoneeo tinednduss inse ecs. this more about how we achieve success in the elections. one of the ways will be to organize with th ie m tju en kne ppe] >> good afternoon, everyone. i want to start by saying thank you to patricia nd the natnal gatifooang th trwe r th r on t n tenwiheoc o a such great c
er, ouhlo tets adt 00es the mar begins when one of ou clients jerry connelly in virginia 920 tes iha ntc idwh rug rnlrn d,eahee progressive that the people in the room would love to have elect, you know, stands shoulder to shoulder with you all on al ofhe isstheman y cfo, tg . heos 0vs. bblooin the next round. 350 votes. so i would say, please, it can be tiringntuingto g anyt o old ci wthnim atakin the atmosphere that we're in. but i would ask you all to please persevere as you have and...